A House appropriations subcommittee passes a spending bill that includes a modest $6.5 million budget increase for the federal safety agency that's far below what the Obama administration had requested.
by Staff
May 7, 2015
Rogers
2 min to read
Rogers
Despite Obama administration pleas to triple spending on vehicle defect investigations, a Republican-controlled House appropriations subcommittee has passed a bill that would raise the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration's overall budget by just $6.5 million over this year's level.
The House Appropriations Committee is expected to consider the $55.3 billion 2016 Transportation, Housing and Urban Development Bill next week. The legislation proposes spending that's $9.7 billion below the Obama administration's budget request.
Ad Loading...
The spending bill allocates an overall NHTSA budget of $837 million. In contrast, the U.S. Department of Transportation's spending proposal includes tripling the budget of the Office of Defects Investigation (ODI), a unit within NHTSA, and raising NHTSA's overall budget to $908 million. The ODI budget would account for $31.3 million.
"These are tight-budget times, and this legislation makes the most out of each and every transportation and housing dollar," said Rep. Hal Rogers (R-Ky.), House appropriations chairman, in a released statement.
In the past year, NHTSA has came under fire during various Senate and House hearings held to address safety recall delays related to the defective General Motors ignition switches and Takata air bag inflators. But some legislators, including Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.), have tempered their harsh criticism with acknowledgement that the federal safety agency is understaffed and underfunded.
During an April 10 speech at the New York International Auto Show, NHTSA Administrator Mark Rosekind stressed the importance of strengthening the defect recall system.
"What has become clear over the past several months is that NHTSA requires additional authority under the law, as well as greater cooperation and effort from manufacturers and dealers, to ensure that vehicles with safety-related defects are removed from our roads before they can injure or kill," Rosekind said in the speech.
Ad Loading...
But in 2016, the safety agency may have to pursue those goals without the benefit of a substantially expanded staff.
Distracted driving remains one of the most persistent risks in fleet operations. New approaches focus on removing mobile device use entirely while adding real-time safety support.
As distraction risks evolve, fleets are turning to smarter, more connected technologies to better understand what’s happening behind the wheel. Part 2 explores how these tools are helping identify risky behaviors and improve visibility across operations.
Distracted driving is often measured by what we can see—phones in hand, eyes off the road. But what about the distractions we can’t? A recent incident raises a bigger question about awareness, attention, and why subtle risks so often go unnoticed.
Fleets have more driver data than ever, so why isn't behavior changing? Training requires more than reports and coaching — it requires real-world practice.
A two-part conversation with Stefan Heck on how AI is transforming the fight against distracted driving. As fleets adopt smarter tools, the focus shifts from reacting to preventing risk. In Part 1, we look at where AI is making an impact for fleets today.
An 11% drop in pedestrian fatalities in early 2025 signals progress in U.S. road safety, but elevated death rates and ongoing risks underscore the need for continued action from fleets and policymakers.